Portal:Complex Systems Digital Campus/From Individual to Social Cognition e-Department

= From Individual to Social Cognition e-Department =

Description
Cognition is information processing, understood in a wide sense, that is, including all related aspects such as, for instance, interpretation processes. A cognitive system is thus an information processing system. It can be embedded in a single individual or distributed over a large number of individuals. We would talk of individual cognition or social cognition. Social cogition is a cognitive process distributed over all members of a society, interacting within a social network. Individual cognition as well might be considered as distributed cognition over a neural network.

In social networks, some information reaches some agents, then its content is processed by the social network, producing other pieces of information and other social links following series of interactions. This process of social cognition could thus lead to a transformation of the social network.

At individual and collective levels alike, cognitive processes are obeying strong constraints: individuals cannot achieve anything outside of what they they know how to do, themselves or in interaction with others; nothing can be anticipated outside of what they can predict alone or by interacting with others. Both the network structure and the nature of interactions are as such strong constraints on cognitive processes.

New protocols appear which make it possible to describe or quantify these constraints at the infra-individual, individual and collective levels, thus suggesting, in turn, new models. The quick migration of social interactions towards digital media enables the massive collection of data on social cognition, from the viewpoint of both its processes (spatial structure of interactions, temporal distributions, etc.) and its products (online documents, user-focused data, etc.). The coexitence of these two phenomena opens today new perspectives for the study of individual and social cognition on the basis of benchmarking models with empirical data. This ought to be a major ambition for a better understanding of the evolution of our societies.

Board

 * Charles Tijus (chair)
 * David Chavalarias (co-chair)
 * Jean-Philippe Cointet

Bibliography & resources
the roadmaps

the e-sessions of CS-DC-15.org

e-conference in the e-multiconference CS-DC'15

Board

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Board

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Keywords
A

Agent Based Modelling (1) algorithmic probability (1) animal model (1) applied mathematics (1) area V1 (1) ASD (1) Autism (1) automatic term extraction (1)

B

bilogy (1) bioeconomics (1) biomechanics (1) Brain Sciences (1)

C

Categorization (1) Cloud (1) Clouds (1) co-authorship networks (1) co-evolving networks (1) Cognition (2) complex systems (10) complexity (5) complexity theory (1) computational linguistics (1) Computational Neuroscience (1) computer science (5) counter-culture (1) Critical Phenomena (1) Crowd Simulation (1) cultural industry (1)

D

Decision-making (1) development (3) distributed learning (1) dorsal event (1)

E

Economics (2) econophysics (1) Education (2) empirical research (1) Environmental Sustainability (1) evolution (3) evolving epidemic model (1)

G

Galois Lattices (1) Gene (1) generalization (1) grammar (3)

H

HPC (1)

I

information and technology (1) instructional design (1) Integrate-And-Fire (1)

K

kinematics (1)

L

language emergence (1) learning (1) Legacy applications (1) linguistics (2)

M

Model-driven engineering (1) Modelling Human Behaviour (1) motor selection (1)

N

Natural language procesing (2) Natural Language Processing (2) networks (4) neural network model (1) Neural Networks (1) Neuroscience (2) News monitoring (1) Non-Linear System Social Dynamics & Simulations (1)

O

Open Access Repository (1) open science (2) Opinion Dynamics (2)

P

Pavlovian blindsight (1) philosophy (1) phisical (1) Planning (1) prior knowledge (1) psychology (1) pulvinar (1)

R

Reasoning (1)

S

Scheduling (1) Science Gateway (1) semantic networks (1) Semantic spaces (1) simulation (2) Social Complexity (1) social norms (2) social psychology (1) society (1) socio-semantic dynamics (1) Software Quality assurance (1) Spaciotemporal Stimulus Responses (1) STDP (1) swiming start (1) synergy (2) syntax (1)

T

Temporal analysis (1) Text clustering (1) two-stream hypothesis (1)

U

unconventional computing (2) User centered design (1) User-guided provisioning provisioning (1)

V

Virtualization Technologies (1) voter model (1)